Schnaufer v. Ahr

53 Misc. 299, 103 N.Y.S. 195
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 Misc. 299 (Schnaufer v. Ahr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schnaufer v. Ahr, 53 Misc. 299, 103 N.Y.S. 195 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Gildersleeve, J.

In December, 1899, one Hikisch, who had begun work on certain premises, northwest corner of Brook avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-ninth street, Bronx, failed, and abandoned said premises. Plaintiff had furnished certain sand, stone and team hire on the premises for which he claimed Hikisch owed him $1,432.09. Plaintiff alleges that they were furnished with the knowledge and acquiescence of defendant, which is denied by defendant. Certain contractors filed mechanic’s liens, and plaintiff states that he was preparing to do the same when defendant, it is alleged, requested him not to do so, and agreed that, if the lien were withheld, he, defendant, would pay the Hikisch claim, on the further condition that plaintiff would furnish the sand necessary to complete the buildings. To this, plaintiff says, he assented; whereas defendant says that it was a gratuity on his part, as he only wanted to offer plaintiff an opportunity to make up for his loss on the. Hikisch contract. The amount of the Hikisch claim was $1,432.09, and the price of sand $2.50 a load. The amount for the sand furnished defendant to complete was $100 and the price of sand $2.50 per load, the same as the Hikisch contract. Defendant was the owner of the lot on the northwest comer of Brook avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-ninth street, Bronx, with the length running along One Hundred and Sixty-ninth street. The houses were built facing One Hundred and Sixty-ninth street and the foundations were necessarily for the most part on the lot owned by the defendant. The lot behind, upon which the houses would rest in the rear, was owned by one Schmitt, but afterward purchased by' defendant. Hikisch never owned any of the land. He seems to have had [301]*301a contract of sale with defendant and paid him $100 down, and then proceeded to build. All the foundation stone and sand were furnished by plaintiff. Plaintiff says defendant supplied the anchors of iron which went into the foundation walls. Defendant denies that he did so. Plaintiff and his witnesses say that the amount of stone was ascertained by the foreman of the masons, Foliana, in the presence of said Foliana, plaintiff’s superintendent, Martin, and the contractor ISTikisch, and that the figures so made were assented to and the original memorandum of the amounts was used by plaintiff in making up his bill for stone. The. sand account was made from tickets. Plaintiff, as we have seen, says that he had taken measures to imitate the others who had claims against Hikiseh, by filing a mechanic’s lien and stated to defendant the amount of plaintiff’s claim, and that, at defendant’s request and on his promise to pay the claim when he had completed the buildings and sold them, if plaintiff would forbear filing his lien and agree to furnish the rest of the sand for the buildings, plaintiff forbore filing the lien and,s in due course, furnished the sand to defendant. The latter was paid for in a note and cash; but the main claim of $1,432.09 was refused, although defendant sold the houses in 1904, as claimed by plaintiff, who says he saw the transfer in the paper.” The said transfer is. not denied by defendant. There is no dispute as to ownership in the fronting property on One Hundred and Sixtv-ninth street, in defendant, or that he afterward bought the Schmitt rear lot, and completed the buildings partly with plaintiff’s sand and on the ^foundations built with plaintiff’s stone and sand. Foliana, the mason, and Miller, the plaster man, put liens on the property, and were paid by defendant. The Schmitt property was taken over by defendant subject to the Miller lien. The issues were submitted to the jury in a charge to which no exception was taken, and the jury gave a verdict for the full amount claimed by plaintiff. At the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of the whole case, the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on the following grounds: (1) That the promise, if made, was to pay the debt of another and is void under the Statute of Frauds as [302]*302not being in writing; (2) no promise lias been proven to pay any specific sum in consideration of no lien being filed; (3) that, if any promise was made, it was to pay the amount of Nikisch’s indebtedness, and there is no proof as to what the amount of the indebtedness was. The motion was denied and exception duly taken. The court, in substance, charged •the jury that, as any promise, if made, was not in writing, there was no obligation upon defendant unless he made a direct promise on a consideration moving to himself; that in this case such consideration was claimed to be plaintiff’s right to file a lien on defendant’s premises; and, consequently, if defendant had promised to pay plaintiff for the materials delivered to Nikisch if plaintiff did not file a lien, the jury must be satisfied that the plaintiff had a right to file a lien upon- the defendant’s premises in order that there should be a consideration for defendant’s alleged promise. Neither side took any exception to the charge, as we have already stated. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, according to stenographer’s minutes, for “ $1,432.09, with interest,” but the verdict as recorded was for $1,432.09, without any mention of interest. About two weeks after the trial and before the entry of judgment, upon special motion, the court granted an order, (hat the verdict rendered as $1,432.09 in favor of plaintiff be and the same is hereby amended so as to have added thereto interest from the 1st day of January, 1905.” Thereafter, and on October thirty-first, and not in the presence of the defendant, there was a calculation of interest to the amount of $150.56, and thereupon judgment was entered against the defendant for damages $1,582.65, besides costs.” On October nineteenth the defendant’s motion'for a new trial upon the minutes, upon all the grounds stated in section 999 of the Code, was denied by order entered that day. We think that there was some proof upon which the jury could find that, in December, 1899, Nikisch owed to plaintiff $1,432.09 and that plaintiff could have filed a lien against the property, and that, in consideration of plaintiff’s not filing such lien, defendant promised to assume the payment of the Nikisch debt upon certain conditions which have been fulfilled. As defendant was the owner [303]*303of the premises, or, a part thereof, he derived a direct benefit to himself from the abstention of plaintiff from filing a lien, which consideration took the promise out of the Statute of Frauds. “ Where the primary debt subsists and was antecedently contracted, the promise to pay it is original when it, is founded on a new consideration moving to the promisor and beneficial to him, and such that the promisor thereby comes under an independent duty of payment irrespective of the liability of the principal debtor.” White v. Rintoul, 108 N. Y. 222. There can be but little doubt that the defendant knew all about the work going on at the premises. The jury must have so thought. Defendant still owned the lot upon which all the buildings faced and, hence, upon which the foundations, made up of plaintiff’s materials, lay for the most part. He confesses that title had never parted from him and he was $100 ahead by the Hikisch deposit. Hildsch failed December 15, 1899. Plaintiff made his last delivery about a week or so before. Under the Mechanic’s Lien Law he liad ninety days to file his notice of lien, running the limit into March, 1900. Defendant admits that there was a meeting in March. Plaintiff and his superintendent say it was soon after the failure that meeting was had. At any rate, there seems little doubt that a meeting was had in the ninety-day period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Misc. 299, 103 N.Y.S. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnaufer-v-ahr-nysupct-1907.